Trump's Mid-East Deal of the Century Must Dismantle UNRWA's Fantasyland

U.S. President Donald Trump walks to speak with supporters after arriving on Air Force One at the Palm Beach International Airport to spend Easter weekend at his Mar-a-Lago resort on April 18, 2019, in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Full disclosure: Neither of us has seen an advance copy of President Trump’s Middle East “Deal of the Century.” But we can be certain that for this peace plan — or any other plan — to succeed it must tackle not only the pocketbooks, but the minds and hearts of the signatories.

We are old enough to remember the hope, even euphoria, that greeted the signing of the Oslo Accords at the White House in 1993. And while historians and pundits will forever argue who “lost Oslo” — we believe peace was never attainable because no serious demand came from donor nations to demand changes in the Palestinian narrative about their Jewish neighbors.

Time and again, official Palestinian Authority (PA) media have rejected the Jewish state's validity, denied historic Jewish presence in the Holy Land, demonized and dehumanized their Jewish neighbors, and glorified mass-murdering Palestinian terrorists.

Generations of Palestinian children have been brainwashed in United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) schools, where despite press releases to the contrary, "teachers" continue to use textbooks and curriculum that won’t even mention Israel and whose maps include a phony Arab name for Tel Aviv. Worse still, workbooks teach fifth graders to venerate a Palestinian woman who murdered and maimed dozens of Israelis.

Thousands of UNRWA students spent last summer learning how to shoot with live ammunition and many now camp out near Gaza’s border with Israel as Hamas, which dominates UNRWA media, continues its violent Friday assaults on Israel's international border.

If President Trump’s "Deal of the Century" is to succeed, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo needs to win support from the 68 donor nations, who prop up UNRWA, to dramatically reform the UN Agency.

The peace plan must include a change in the status of 5 million descendants of Arab refugees from the 1948 war, which the Arab world waged on Israel hours after its funding. Seventy years on, they live in 59 “temporary” UNRWA refugee camps with the false hope of a "return" to villages that haven't existed for nearly three-quarters of century. Not another people on Earth has been able to transfer its refugee status from generation to generation and demand the “right of return.”

Palestinians aren’t blind to thriving state built on Jewish blood, sweat, and tears. During a meeting a few years ago with Palestinian community leaders in the Hebron area, one former Jordanian official lamented “we have wasted another generation.” Those among the Palestinian populaiton who seek normalcy and prosperity will (secretly) welcome any Trump plan that will deliver a better future for their children and grandchildren.

But if the PA — beholden to the old Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) — continues in power, there will be no peace, unless and until the PA cancels its “pay to slay” Jews policy, which provides financial reward to the families of terrorists; unless and until the new PA war curriculum in all PA and UNRWA schools is expunged; and unless and until these schools teach the next generation that real peace and mutual respect are laudable and achievable goals.

Such change in behavior will not happen so long as the world pays for the UNRWA-led, dead-end travesty where the Palestinian people are trapped.

Rabbi Abraham Cooper is the Associate Dean, Director Global Social Action Agenda at the Simon Wiesenthal Center, a leading Jewish human rights organization. Abraham Cooper has been a longtime activist for Jewish and human rights causes. His extensive involvement in Soviet Jewry included visiting refuseniks, helping to open Moscow’s first Jewish Cultural Center, and lecturing at the Soviet Academy of Sciences and the Sakharov Foundation. In 1977, he came to L.A. to help Rabbi Marvin Hier found the Simon Wiesenthal Center, and for three decades Rabbi Cooper has overseen the Wiesenthal Center’s international social action agenda including worldwide antisemitism and extremist groups, Nazi crimes, Interfaith Relations, the struggle to thwart the anti-Israel Divestment campaign, and worldwide promotion of tolerance education. Widely recognized as an international authority on issues related to digital hate and the Internet, Rabbi Cooper was listed in 2017 by Newsweek among the top most influential Rabbis in the United States. To read more of his reports — Click Here Now.

David Bedein is Director of the Israel Resource News Agency​ at the Center for Near East Policy Research​ in Jerusalem.

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